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HMS Farndale

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HMS Farndale 1943 IWM FL 13058
HMS Farndale, September 1943 (IWM)
History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Farndale
Ordered4 September 1939
BuilderSwan Hunter, Wallsend
Laid down21 November 1939
Launched30 September 1940
Completed27 April 1941
Identificationpennant number:L70
Honours and
awards
  • Malta Convoys 1941
  • Mediterranean 1941
  • Libya 1942
  • Atlantic 1942
  • Arctic 1942
  • North Africa 1942–43
  • Sicily 1943
  • Salerno 1943
  • Aegean 1943
  • South France 1944
  • North Sea 1945
FateScrapped, 1962
BadgeOn a Field Red, a plate thereon a fox’s head caboosed Red within an annulet Blue
General characteristics Type II
Displacement
  • 1,050 long tons (1,070 t) standard
  • 1,430 long tons (1,450 t) full load
Length85.3 m (279 ft 10 in) o/a
Beam9.6 m (31 ft 6 in)
Draught2.51 m (8 ft 3 in)
Propulsion
Speed
  • 27 knots (31 mph; 50 km/h)
  • 25.5 kn (29.3 mph; 47.2 km/h) full
Range3,600 nmi (6,700 km) at 14 kn (26 km/h)
Complement164
Armament

HMS Farndale was a Type 2 Template:Sclass2- destroyer of the Royal Navy which served in World War II. She was scrapped in 1962. She has been the only British Warship so far to bear this name.

Service history

Farndale was ordered on 4 September 1939 under the 1939 War Emergency Build Programme.[1] She was completed in April 1941. She was adopted by the civil community of Southgate, then in Middlesex, as part of Warship Week in 1942.

She earned eleven battle honours for extensive service during the Second World War. This included service in the Mediterranean where she was severely damaged in February 1942, and resulted in extensive repairs in the UK that year. She then saw service with Russian convoys, followed by work to support the allied landings in Italy. Towards the end of the war she was nominated for service in the Far East in support of Operation Zipper for landings in Malaya, which was cancelled with the end of the War.

She returned to Sheerness from the Far East in November 1945 and was transferred to the Reserve Fleet. From 1946 until 1951 she was part of the Nore Local Flotilla and was then placed in reserve again at Hartlepool. She remained there until 1962 when she was sold to BISCO for scrapping by Hughes Bolckow. She arrived at their breakers yard in Blyth on 29 November 1962.[2]

References

  1. ^ Mason, Geoffrey B. (2004). Gordon Smith (ed.). "HMS Farndale (L 70) – Type 2, Hunt-class Escort Destroyer". naval-history.net. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  2. ^ Critchley, Mike (1982). British Warships Since 1945: Part 3: Destroyers. Liskeard, UK: Maritime Books. p. 32. ISBN 0-9506323-9-2.

Publications